01844nam a22001697a 4500999001900000008004100019100004700060245009600107260002600203300003200229520116200261650007801423773002601501906003301527942000701560952010701567 c519091d519091220127b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aLiu, Mingtang and Tsai, Kellee S. 931985 aStructural power, hegemony, and state capitalism: Limits to china’s global economic power aPolitics and Society  a49(2), Jun, 2021: p.235-268 aA comparative historical perspective shows how globalization and the specificities of China’s rapid growth era limit its hegemonic potential in the twenty-first century global economy. Although state capitalism and openness to foreign capital facilitated China’s economic transformation, interactions among three forms of capital—state, private, and foreign—have produced developmental dynamics that constrain China’s capacity to assume the position of the world’s economic hegemon. These include (1) the compromised competitiveness of China’s corporate sector due to the domination of state-owned enterprises, (2) limits on the ability of Chinese firms to develop leading transnational corporations, and (3) early openness to and continued dependence on foreign capital. Moreover, the party-state’s efforts to ameliorate these constraints arouse external suspicion rather than support a Chinese-led hegemonic order based on consent and shared interests. These historically conditioned realities should temper expectations that China is converging teleologically toward a familiar hegemonic role in the international economy. – Reproduced  aChina, Hegemony, Globalization, State capitalism, Structural power929317 aPolitics and Society  aECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT - CHINA cAR 00102ddc40709393141aIIPAbIIPAd2022-01-27h49(2), Jun, 2021: p.235-268pAR126130r2022-01-27yAR